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The Gaijin Ghost

A photoblog, where you become the phantom foreigner, exploring travel destinations in Japan.
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jizo statues hasedera temple kamakura japan

Jizo statues, honoring babies lost to stillbirths, miscarriages, and aborted pregnancies at Hasedera Temple in Kamakura, Japan, on June 6, 2023.

The Year in Review (and an Announcement for 2024)

January 1, 2024

As I post this, news of the massive earthquake on the opposite coast of Honshu in Ishikawa Prefecture is still unfolding live. The bulk of this was written before today, but we’ve heard the tsunami warnings and seen the ongoing TV footage of buildings burning and road damage caused by the quake. It’s not a very auspicious start to the New Year for that side of Japan. My heart goes out to anyone affected by this disaster on what is normally the biggest family holiday in Japanese culture. It makes the rest of this (which is just my own unrelated personal thing) seem trivial, but I’m going to follow through with posting it to wrap up the year as planned.

As they say in Japanese: Akemashite omedetou gozaimasu. A year ago, on January 1, 2023, I made a New Year’s resolution to update this site more regularly, writing at least once a week about something related to travel or culture — including pop culture — in Japan. Now that 2023 is over, I thought I’d take a look back at the list of things I posted here over the last twelve months. For each month, I’ll also share one or more new photos, closing out the yearbook with some final overlooked highlights from places in Tokyo, Kanagawa, and Kyoto. At the end, I’ll make a special announcement and give some news about the future of this site.

chion-in temple kyoto cherry blossom illumination sunset light-up

The evening sakura light-up at Chion-in Temple in Kyoto on March 31, 2023. Nine months later, this is the temple where NHK rang in the New Year with a real bell at midnight.

A few of the pictures below are pulled from existing photo galleries, but since they got buried on another page and I neglected to share them here, I’m treating them as fair game still. As you’ll see, I started off strong in 2023, posting five blog entries per month in January and February. However, as is often the case with weak-willed humans making life goals, I got busy, my dedication faltered, and that number dropped to three per month in March and April.

By late May, I had begun alternating shorter “Photo Highlight” entries with regular posts, and that helped me regain my footing and stay on top of my goal better. It made it more manageable for me to keep touching base here every week or so.

As the year went on and my main freelance gig off-site changed to travel writing as well, I began adding a dash of American pop culture, without an explicit connection to Japan, to the mix on The Gaijin Ghost. Throw in a stray stateside destination or two, and what you have is a year in the life of a Tokyo-based expat whose mind map resembles the Venn diagram between Christopher Nolan movies and Denver International Airport.

shibuya scramble crossing elevated view tokyu plaza bao ce la vi

Tokyo’s famous Shibuya Scramble Crossing, seen from the 17th-floor restaurant BAO by CÉ LA VI in the Tokyu Plaza Shibuya mall, on August 30, 2023.

I still need to go back and fill in the gaps on the 2023 timeline in a couple of places, basically just finishing two posts where I started a draft for each of them but never finished it. When all is said and done, though, I will have 60 posts for the year, so I’ll have averaged five posts per month (maxing out at eight in July, the month I changed jobs).

That’s a good way to cap off 2023, a year when I stayed very busy and on the move, averaging 10,002 steps a day, according to my iPhone counter. I’d like to keep the walkathon going in 2024, but the biggest piece of personal news this year is one I haven’t even shared yet. I’ll get into that and the reasons for my departure at the end, but spoiler alert: this is probably the last new thing I’ll be posting here for a while.

JANUARY

Year’s First Sunrise: On Top of the World with Mount Fuji

The Tokyo Station Hotel: Review and Photo Tour

Mario’s Revenge: A Daytime Photo Tour of Super Nintendo World

Furusato Matsuri (The Hometown Festival) at Tokyo Dome

The Anthony Bourdain Tour of Namba, Osaka

shibuya station new ginza line platform tokyo metro subway train

The new Ginza Line platform in Shibuya Station on January 19, 2023.

FEBRUARY

10 Highlights of Tokyo in 2022

The Lantern Festival 2023 in Yokohama Chinatown

Japan’s Life-Sized Gundam, Through the Years

Anatomy of a Controversy: Revisiting the Japanese Wife Scenes in ‘Licorice Pizza’

You’re Gonna Need a Bigger Lens for USJ’s Jaws Ride

yokohama marine tower look-down window view japan

View from the look-down window in Yokohama Marine Tower on February 2, 2023.

yokohama marine tower observation floor view japan

The Yokohama skyline from the Marine Tower observation floor on February 2, 2023.

MARCH

The ‘Be Kobe’ Monument and Port of Kobe Earthquake Memorial

Japan National Stadium and the 2011 Tohoku Disaster

5 More Things Unique to Universal Studios Japan

gion tatsumi bridge cherry blossoms kyoto japan

Cherry blossoms blooming over Gion Tatsumi Bridge in Kyoto on March 31, 2023.

APRIL

Deer and Cherry Blossoms at Todaiji Temple in Nara

Sakura and Bricks from Nanzenji Temple to the Keage Incline

Ginkakuji Temple and the Philosopher’s Path in Kyoto

kyoto tower station skyway elevated view

Kyoto Tower, seen from the Skyway in Kyoto Station on April 1, 2023.

nijo castle moat turret yagura illuminated magic hour kyoto

 The southwest turret of Nijo Castle, illuminated in Kyoto on April 1, 2023.

MAY

‘Star Wars: Visions’ Volume 2 Still Offers a Taste of Tokyo Anime

‘The Mandalorian’ Season 3 Treads the Living Waters

Digital Art and Robots from Toyosu to Odaiba

Inside Budokan, Tokyo’s Historic Music and Martial Arts Venue

Photo Highlight: Rainy Yurakucho Evening

maguro zanmai tuna sushi set tsukiji sushiiwa seiseki-sakuragaoka tokyo

A “Maguro Zanmai Sushi” set from Tsukiji Sushiiwa in Seiseki-Sakuragaoka on May 2, 2023.

shin godzilla statue illuminated tokyo midtown hibiya square

The Shin Godzilla statue lit up in Hibiya Godzilla Square on May 29, 2023.

JUNE

The Kabuki Hall Food Court [Updated with New Info on Robot Restaurant]

Photo Highlight: Hasedera Temple Hydrangeas

Comparing the Ghibli Museum with Ghibli Park

Photo Highlight: Gamera in Chofu

Fushimi Inari Taisha: Climbing Kyoto’s Famous Mountain Shrine

Photo Highlight: The Back Side of Terror

great buddha kamakura kotoku-in temple

The Great Buddha of Kamakura at Kotoku-in Temple on June 6, 2023.

okunitama shrine zuishinmon gate fuchu tokyo

Zuishinmon Gate at Okunitama Shrine in Fuchu, Tokyo, on June 16, 2023.

toho cinemas fuchu escalator kururu building tokyo

The escalator to movie heaven at Toho Cinemas Fuchu on June 16, 2023.

JULY

Tokyo Disneyland 40th Anniversary Report

Photo Highlight: Crossing the Rainbow Bridge

Tokyo from the Bike Lane: A New View of the City

Photo Highlight: Sawtooth Mountain’s ‘View from Hell’

This Bomb Is Mobile: ‘The Dark Knight’ Trilogy as an American Time Capsule

The 100 Greatest ‘Star Wars’ Moments

Photo Highlight: Shin-Okubo to Shinjuku

The View from Abeno Harukas, Now Japan’s Second-Tallest Building

sompo museum art yamashita kiyoshi van gogh sunflowers shinjuku tokyo

The Sompo Museum of Art during its Yamashita Kiyoshi centennial on July 6, 2023.

sompo museum art window mode gakuen cocoon building view shinjuku tokyo

The base of the Cocoon Building seen from the Sompo Museum of Art on July 6, 2023.

tokyo station midtown yaesu shin-marunouchi building terrace view

Tokyo Station, with light glinting off the new Tokyo Midtown Yaesu skyscraper, on July 6, 2023.

tokyo dome city boarding thunder dolphin roller coaster

The Thunder Dolphin roller coaster in Tokyo Dome City on July 18, 2023.

tokyo dome city roller coaster track centerless ferris wheel

The Thunder Dolphin track snaking through the centerless Big O Ferris wheel on July 18, 2023.

AUGUST

Tokyo’s Mexican Breakfast Options (Plus, a Trip to the Starbucks Reserve Roastery)

Photo Highlight: Climbing Mount Fuji

Osaka Castle (By Day and Night) and the Tower of the Sun

Photo Highlight: Koenji Awa Odori Returns

yebisu garden place center square green trees tokyo

The center square at Yebisu Garden Place on August 2, 2023.

ameyoko shopping street ueno tokyo

Ameyoko shopping street in Ueno on August 10, 2023.

swan boats dock shinobazu pond ueno tokyo

Swan boats docked beside Shinobazu Pond in Ueno on August 10, 2023.

bar piano door open nonbei yokocho drunkard's alley shibuya tokyo

Bar Piano, where Anthony Bourdain drank, in Shibuya’s Nonbei Yokocho, on August 16, 2023.

claudia cocktail bar ishinohana shibuya tokyo anthony bourdain

The Claudia, the same cocktail Anthony Bourdain sipped, at Bar Ishinohana on August 30, 2023.

SEPTEMBER

10 Overlooked Highlights of Kobe, Osaka, Chiba, Shizuoka, and More

Photo Highlight: Warner Bros. Sunset

Street Art and a Ghibli Exhibition on Tennozu Isle

Photo Highlight: The Shibuya Nebuta Festival

The Skeptic’s Guide to Enjoying the Denver Airport Conspiracy Theories

shibuya nebuta matsuri float center gai tokyo aomori

An alternate view of the Shibuya Nebuta Festival float on September 16, 2023.

tokyo midtown yaesu entrance sculpture star tokujin yoshioka

Tokujin Yoshioka’s “Star” sculpture outside Tokyo Midtown Yaesu on September 19, 2023.

kabuki-za theater entrance night ginza tokyo

Outside Ginza’s Kabuki-za theater on the night of September 19, 2023.

OCTOBER

Photo Highlight: Portable Shrine at Jingumae Crossing

‘Star Wars’ Cinema Concert at the Tokyo International Forum

The Michelin Files: Sushi Yoshitake, Tokyo’s Only Three-Star Michelin Sushi Restaurant

The Harry Potter Cafe and Warner Bros. Studio Tour Tokyo (Coming Soon)

Photo Highlights: Skytree After Dark

The Michelin Files: A Ramen and Gyoza Shop Starter Pack

Photo Highlight: Shibuya Halloween Crackdown

akasaka station sign harry potter cafe tokyo

The sign outside Akasaka Station and the Harry Potter Cafe on October 9, 2023.

cotton candy cocktail tir na nog ginza tokyo

A cotton candy cocktail at Tír na nÓg in Ginza on October 11, 2023.

wako building illuminated ginza 4-chome intersection magic hour tokyo

The Wako building at the Ginza 4-chome intersection around sunset on October 11, 2023.

miyashita park rooftop human trust cinema shibuya elevated view tokyo

Miyashita Park’s rooftop, seen from Human Trust Cinema Shibuya on October 29, 2023.

NOVEMBER

From Amityville to Ringu: The Evil Eyes of Three Houses and One Cabin

Photo Highlight: Imperial Palace Moat, Elevated View

Tokyo Disneyland: 2022–2023 Highlights (Coming Soon)

The Michelin Files: The Tokyo Pizza Restaurant That Ranks Among the World’s Best

Tocho on Thanksgiving (with Memories of New York)

tokyo international film festival midtown hibiya 2023

The final day of the Tokyo International Film Festival in Hibiya on November 1, 2023.

capitoline wolf sculpture replica ajinomoto stadium chofu tokyo

A replica of the Capitoline Wolf outside Ajinomoto Stadium in Chofu on November 3, 2023.

DECEMBER

Photo Highlights: Two Autumn Leaf Light-Ups

The Michelin Files: A Yakitori and Curry Shop Starter Pack

Oppenheimer’s Most Effective Scene Puts Kyoto in the Room

Photo and Video Highlights: Rainbow Bridge Sunset and Fireworks

nishi-shinjuku skyscrapers takashimiya times square rooftop view tokyo

Nishi-Shinjuku, seen from the 13th floor of Takashimaya Times Square on December 6, 2023.

shinjuku gyoen fall colors autumn takashimiya times square rooftop view tokyo

Takashimaya Times Square view of the fall colors in Shinjuku Gyoen on December 6, 2023.

icho ginkgo trees leaves street central tokyo

Ginkgo trees shedding their leaves near the Tokyo International Forum on December 12, 2023.

hamburger steak soup curry sapporo dominica ginza tokyo

Hamburger steak soup curry at Sapporo Dominica in Ginza on December 12, 2023.

Year of the Offline Baby

I’ve deliberately buried the lede here because I feel like anyone who’s read this far (or at least scrolled down past the pictures) probably isn’t some random stranger who’s uninvested in the person behind the writing. In 2023, I put the reader on a first-name basis with my wife, Azusa, making her something of a phantom character here, even though I used to think it was presumptuous when I’d hear people refer to their partners by name without introducing them (as if everyone was just expected to know who this other person was). I figured that even if someone didn’t know me or her, they could probably surmise the nature of our relationship—if not as spouses, then at least as traveling companions.

2024 sees us faced with the possibility of parenthood. Azusa is pregnant, and the due date, which happens to be Independence Day in the U.S., means we could have a baby who’s literally “born on the Fourth of July.” On Christmas Day 2023, I heard a heartbeat for the first time.

Obviously, this is a pretty major life development, both in the sense that there’s life growing inside her and in the sense that it will change our own lives (and already has since we first found out in early November). Faced with becoming a father, it’s made me reevaluate my priorities, embracing the need, in the Japanese way, to be a more responsible person who looks out for the welfare of the group and attends to the needs of others before their own.

japanese home pregnancy test positive tokyo

A positive pregnancy test in the Meyer home on November 4, 2023.

Stephen King once wrote, “Life is not a support system for art. It’s the other way around.” That quote comes from his memoir, On Writing, and it’s one I came to appreciate more in 2023. You could substitute “the internet” for “art” in that quote and it would hold just as true.

Since the internet is not the real world, and I’ve reached a good jumping-off point here after a year of blogging, I’ve made the decision to step away from this site for a while. This is something I’ve already done once before, back when Azusa and I first got married in mid-2018. At that point, I had been maintaining the site for two years, but for the next four, I only updated it once a year.

That’s where we’re headed in 2024, I think. Even if it’s just in occasional photo galleries, there are still places in Japan that I’d like to show more of, such as Asakusa, Fuji Five Lakes, Ginza, Himeji Castle, Hiroshima, Kobe, Odaiba, Okinawa, the Rainbow Bridge, Shizuoka, Tokyo Dome City, Ueno, and Yokohama. We still have many places elsewhere that we’d like to visit, too, with the thatched-roof village of Shirakawa-go being one that’s high on the list, if for no other reason than because it’s winter right now, and that would be the perfect season to visit.

If I’m ever able to be a digital nomad for a month and do another road trip across America, I’d like to also maybe write some short “Road Diaries” to go along with that in the manner of my “Photo Highlight” posts. For now, though, I’m going to focus on learning to relive — and if all goes well, raise a child — in the post-pandemic world.

As someone who spent years teaching English conversation classes and having face-to-face interactions with people all day, I’d like to find a healthier balance in 2024 between time spent online and the lost art of life offline. If 2022 was the Year of the Vampire, and 2023 was the Year of the Travel Blog, maybe 2024 will be the Year of the Offline Baby. (In this case, however, it’s a real baby, not just a pet project that’s like my “baby.”)

All that remains is for me to say thank you to anyone who might be reading this. It’s not much compared to other sites I’ve written for, but this little blog of mine with its unpaid staff of one receives about 6,000 visits and 7,000 page views a month. The only catch is that around 5,500 of those come from unique visitors. The page views are also spread out disproportionately, with almost 1,500 of them this month coming just from the February post, “Japan’s Life-Sized Gundam, Through the Years,” and another 1,000 of them coming from the June post, “Comparing the Ghibli Museum with Ghibli Park.” What that and Squarespace’s other dashboard analytics tell me is that I probably have a lot of Gundam and Ghibli fans and other assorted people who are just stumbling across the site through Google searches.

odaiba life-sized unicorn gundam statue blue red winter light-up 2023

Odaiba’s Life-Sized Unicorn Gundam Statue with special blue-and-red lighting on December 23, 2023. This winter lighting is being done as a tie-in for the January release of a new Gundam film.

For years, I dreamed of being a writer without having much to show for it, and I’m extremely grateful to be able to do it for a living (for now, at least). But the truth is, I’ve been doing it for dollars for six and a half years — full-time since 2021 — and beyond traffic statistics, those abstract, meaningless numbers that drive content mills, I have no earthly idea who reads any of what I write. Most of the time, it’s something I do in a complete vacuum, having little to no interaction with readers or even the editors who field my submissions. I wrote for one site for six years without ever having a single face-to-face conversation with anyone there. It leaves me wondering sometimes to what extent I’m just out here talking to myself.

If that’s not the story of the internet in all its solipsistic noise, I don’t know what is. I’ve thought about opening up the comments section and trying to encourage more of a dialogue with readers, the way some podcasters and YouTubers do with their listeners and viewers. Yet attempting to moderate comments and reply to them in earnest might require a bigger time investment, and this site isn’t bringing in any money to begin with. As the Joker once said, “If you’re good at something, never do it for free” … especially when you have a family to support. I don’t want to litter the site with a bunch of trashy ads, but I also haven’t built up enough of a community to really ask people to support me through Patreon or anything like that.

It’s not like I have some great legion of followers on social media, either. Since I’m not on Facebook, Instagram, or TikTok, my only link to that whole bizarro world before was Twitter, which is a cesspool now, more than it ever was. In the same way that it kind of lost the plot when it renamed itself “X,” I feel like the internet in general has lost the plot as sites struggle to keep afloat in the ongoing media apocalypse. When headlines started becoming increasingly vaguer, framing themselves like trick Jeopardy! questions where the reader has to click on the article before they even know for sure what it’s about, that’s when I knew we were in trouble.

All the more reason to embrace the Year of the Offline Baby. This is where I do my best Bono impression — post-Joshua Tree, pre-Achtung Baby — and say, “It’s no big deal, it’s just that [I] have to go away and dream it all up again.”

In the meantime, thanks again for reading, and have a happy New Year in 2024.

fuda-tenjin shrine hatsumode line first new year's visit chofu tokyo

The line for the hatsumode (first shrine visit of the New Year) at Fuda-Tenjin in Chofu, Tokyo, on January 1, 2024.

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